Penelope Keith
Template:Short description Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox person
Dame Penelope Anne Constance Keith (née Hatfield; born 2 April 1940) is an English actress and presenter, active in film, radio, stage and television and primarily known for her roles in the British sitcoms The Good Life and To the Manor Born. She succeeded Lord Olivier as president of the Actors' Benevolent Fund after his death in 1989, and was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in the 2014 New Year Honours for services to the arts and to charity.<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref>
Keith joined the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1963, and went on to win the 1976 Olivier Award for Best Comedy Performance for the play Donkeys' Years. She became a household name in the UK playing Margo Leadbetter in the sitcom The Good Life (1975–78), winning the 1977 BAFTA TV Award for Best Light Entertainment Performance.
In 1978 Keith won the BAFTA TV Award for Best Actress for The Norman Conquests. She then starred as Audrey fforbes-Hamilton in the sitcom To the Manor Born (1979–81), a show that received audiences of more than 20 million. She went on to star in another six sitcoms, including Executive Stress (1986–88), No Job for a Lady (1990–92) and Next of Kin (1995–97). Since 2000, she has worked mainly in the theatre, with her roles including Madam Arcati in Blithe Spirit (2004) and Lady Bracknell in The Importance of Being Earnest (2007).
Early lifeEdit
Penelope Anne Constance Hatfield was born in Sutton, Surrey in 1940.<ref name="BBC News">Template:Cite news</ref> Her father, an army officer who was a Major by the end of the Second World War, left her mother, Connie, when Keith was a baby, and she spent her early years in Clacton-on-Sea, Essex and Clapham, south London. Her great uncle, John Gurney Nutting, was a partner in the coachbuilding firm of J Gurney Nutting & Co Limited, and Keith recalls sitting in the Prince of Wales's car.<ref name=BBC4FastLady>BBC Four – Penelope Keith and the Fast Lady, 19 February 2009</ref>
Although not a Roman Catholic, at the age of six she was sent to a Catholic convent boarding school run by French nuns in Seaford, East Sussex, with Judy Cornwell.<ref name="lady.co.uk n107">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Cartmill 2022 k254">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Here she became interested in acting,<ref name="BBC News"/> and she frequently went to matinées in the West End with her mother. When she was eight years old, her mother remarried and she adopted her stepfather's surname, Keith. Whilst she did not get on with her stepfather, her mother was a "rock of love" to her. She was rejected by the Central School of Speech and Drama on the grounds that at Template:Convert she was too tall. However, she was then accepted at the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art and spent two years there while working at the Hyde Park Hotel in the evenings.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Keith began her career working in repertory theatre around Britain, including Lincoln, Manchester, and Salisbury. Keith's earliest appearances were in The Tunnel of Love, Gigi, and Flowering Cherry. In 1963, she joined the Royal Shakespeare Company and acted with them in Stratford and at the Aldwych Theatre in London.<ref name="Shakespeare Birthplace Trust o822">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
CareerEdit
Early careerEdit
Keith began her television career in programmes such as The Army Game, Dixon of Dock Green, Wild, Wild Women and The Avengers.<ref name="Express26Oct07"/> In the early 1970s, she appeared in The Morecambe & Wise Show, Ghost Story and The Pallisers. Her film appearances during this time included Every Home Should Have One, Take A Girl Like You, Rentadick and Penny Gold. In 1967, she had a minor role in Carry On Doctor, but the scene was cut from the final edit.<ref name="Express26Oct07"/><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> She appeared as a nurse in A Touch of Love 1969.
Her best known theatre appearance, in 1974, was playing Sarah in The Norman Conquests, alongside Felicity Kendal, her co-star in The Good Life. Keith and Kendal would often film The Good Life during the day and perform on stage in the West End in the evening.Template:Citation needed
In 1977 Keith starred in Brian Sibley's comedy radio broadcast titled ...And Yet Another Partridge in a Pear Tree,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> voicing a woman named Cynthia Bracegirdle whose boyfriend, Algernon Fotherington-Smythe, sends her the 364 gifts mentioned in The Twelve Days of Christmas.
Television fameEdit
Keith achieved fame in 1975 when the BBC sitcom The Good Life began. In the first episode, she was only heard and not seen in her role as Margo Leadbetter, but as the episodes and series went on, the scope of her role increased. In 1977, Keith won a BAFTA award for "Best Light Entertainment Performance" for her role of Margo Leadbetter.<ref name="BAFTA Awards w649">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
From 1979 to 1981, she played the lead role of Audrey fforbes-Hamilton in the TV series To the Manor Born. Following To the Manor Born, Keith has appeared in the lead role in six other sitcoms: Sweet Sixteen, Moving, Executive Stress, No Job for a Lady, Law and Disorder and Next of Kin. She also had the starring role in a TV adaptation of Agatha Christie's play Spider's Web. She won a second BAFTA award as "Best Actress" in 1978 for The Norman Conquests.<ref name="BAFTA Awards e097">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In 1982 Keith starred in a TV production of Frederick Lonsdale's On Approval. In 1988, she hosted one series of the ITV panel show What's My Line?, following the death of its former presenter, Eamonn Andrews. She had a featured role in the 1998 ITV serial Coming Home.Template:Citation needed
WorkEdit
Keith has regularly appeared on stage, taking the classics and new plays across the UK. These include Shakespeare, Shaw, Sheridan, Wilde, Rattigan and Congreve. She played Lorraine in Noël Coward's Star Quality, while in 2004 she played Madame Arcati in Coward's Blithe Spirit at the Savoy Theatre. In 2004, Keith starred in the first of ten full-cast BBC radio dramatisations of M.C. Beaton's Agatha Raisin novels, playing the title role. Two years later, she appeared at the Chichester Festival in the premiere of Richard Everett's comedy Entertaining Angels, which she later took on tour.<ref name="Gardner 2006 w990">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In 2007 she played the part of Lady Bracknell in The Importance of Being Earnest on tour, which transferred to the West End in 2008, at the Vaudeville Theatre.<ref name="Billington 2008 x603">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> She has voiced adverts including ones for Pimm's, Lurpak, Tesco and most famously, The Parker Pen Company, which was named one of the 100 Greatest Adverts in a Channel 4 programme. In 2012, she starred in Keith Waterstone's Good Grief,<ref name="Live 2012 u734">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> having previously appeared in the play's premier production in 1998.<ref name="Cooper 2012 a016">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In 1997 she starred in the radio adaptations of To the Manor Born.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 2003, she appeared opposite June Brown in the television film Margery & Gladys. In 2007, she starred in a one-off To the Manor Born Christmas Special, Keith also voiced The Bear with Brown Fuzzy Hair in Teletubbies.Template:Citation needed
In 2009 she presented Penelope Keith and the Fast Lady, a one-off documentary for BBC Four about Dorothy Levitt, the Edwardian motoring pioneer. She presented the four-part BBC documentary The Manor Reborn in 2011.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
In 2013 she played the part of Lady Catherine de Bourgh in the BBC period drama Death Comes to Pemberley, an adaptation of the best-selling 2011 P. D. James novel of the same name.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Since 2014, she has presented all three series of the More4/Channel 4 programme Penelope Keith's Hidden Villages and in June 2016 she presented Penelope Keith at Her Majesty's Service again for Channel 4.<ref name="Parker">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="Graham">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In December 2017, she presented Penelope Keith's Coastal Villages, a continuation of the Hidden Villages series. In early 2018, she presented the Channel 4 series Village of the Year with Penelope Keith. It was announced in February 2018 that Keith would be starring as Mrs St Maugham in the Chichester Festival Theatre production of Enid Bagnold's The Chalk Garden from 25 May to 16 June 2018.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Personal lifeEdit
In 1978, the year The Good Life ended, she married Rodney Timson, a policeman. They had met while he was on duty at Chichester Theatre where Keith was performing.<ref name="lady.co.uk n107"/> In 1988, ten years after their wedding, they adopted two boys, who were brothers.<ref name="BBC News"/> Keith and Timson now live in Milford, Surrey. Keith has a great passion for gardening. In 1984, she had a rose named after her.<ref name="Express26Oct07">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> She is president of the South West Surrey chapter of the National Trust.<ref name="NT">Template:Cite news</ref>
In 2014 she presented 4 Extra Goes Gardening in which she celebrated the work of garden designer Gertrude Jekyll at her former home, Munstead Wood in Godalming.Template:Citation needed Keith was President of the Actors' Benevolent Fund from 1990 to 2022,<ref name="guard-benev-fund-13jan24">Template:Cite news</ref> taking over after the death of Laurence Olivier. She was a Trustee of Brooklands Museum from 2009 to 2018.Template:Citation needed
FilmographyEdit
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1967 | Carry On Doctor | Plain Nurse | scenes cut |
1968 | Secret Ceremony | Hotel Assistant | uncredited |
1969 | A Touch of Love | Nurse | |
1970 | Every Home Should Have One | Lotte | |
Take a Girl Like You | Tory Lady | ||
1972 | Rentadick | Reporter | |
1973 | Penny Gold | Miss Hartridge | |
1974 | Ghost Story | Rennie | |
1976 | Seven Nights in Japan | Mrs. Hollander (voice) | |
1978 | The Hound of the Baskervilles | Massage Receptionist | |
1981 | Priest of Love | Dorothy Brett | |
1992 | Beauty and the Beast | Madame Bonbec | voice |
Aladdin | Madam Dim Sum |
TelevisionEdit
Template:BLP unreferenced section
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1957-1961 | The Army Game | ||
1965 | Dixon of Dock Green | Miss Nash | Episode: "A Fine Art" |
Six Shades of Black | Lady Pandora Brewster | Episode: "There is a Happy Land..." | |
1965,
1967, 1969 |
The Avengers | Bride/ Nanny Brown (scene deleted)/Audrey Long | 3 episodes |
1966 | Orlando | Waitress | Episode: "Find the Lady" |
1966-1967 | Emergency Ward 10 | Miss Willy Williams/Iris Bedford | 5 episodes |
1967 | Play of the Week | Betty Brogan | Episode: "ITV Summer Playhouse #4: Difference of Opinion" |
1968 | Comedy Playhouse | Daisy | Episode: "Wild, Wild Women" |
Wild, Wild Women | Pilot | ||
1969 | Market in Honey Lane | Frankie | 2 episodes |
ITV Playhouse | Housekeeper | Episode: "Stables Theatre Company #2: Wedding Night" | |
Hadleigh | Angela Frampton | Episode: "The Dinner Party" | |
1970-1972 | Kate | Wanda Padbury | |
1974 | The Pallisers | Mrs. Hittaway | 2 episodes |
1975 | Two's Company | Mrs. Phillips | Episode: "The Patient" |
1975-1978 | The Good Life | Margo Leadbetter | |
1975-1984 | Jackanory | Storyteller | 11 episodes |
1977 | The Morecambe & Wise Show | Self | Christmas Special |
1979-1981,
2007 |
To the Manor Born | Audrey fforbes-Hamilton | |
1982 | BBC Play of the Month | Maria Wislack | Episode: "On Approval" |
1983 | Sweet Sixteen | Helen Morgan | |
1984-1987 | Tickle on the Tum | Dora the Driver | 8 episodes |
1985 | Moving | Sarah Gladwyn | |
1986-1988 | Executive Stress | Caroline Fielding | |
1989,
1992 |
Woof! | Miss Robson | 2 episodes |
1990-1992 | No Job for a Lady | Jean Price | |
1994 | Law and Disorder | Phillipa Troy | |
1995-1997 | Next of Kin | Maggie Prentice | |
1997 | Teletubbies | The Bear (voice) | Episode: "See-Saw" |
1998 | Coming Home | Aunt Louise | Part One |
2003 | Margery & Gladys | Margery Heywood | TV movie |
2006 | The Secret Show | Nanna Poo-Poo | Episode: "Commando Babies" |
2011 | Tinga Tinga Tales | Queen Bee | Episode: "Why Bees Sing" |
2013 | Death Comes to Pemberley | Lady Catherine de Bourgh | 1 episode |
TheatreEdit
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1959 | Harlequinade | Edna Selby | Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art |
1963 | The Tempest | Royal Shakespeare Theatre (press nights) | |
Julius Caesar | |||
Henry VI | Simpcox's Wife | ||
Richard III | Lord Mayor's Wife | ||
Oedipus Rex | Jocasta | ||
The Lower-Middle Class Wedding Party | Lady | ||
1963-1964 | Henry VI | Royal Shakespeare Company | |
Julius Caesar | |||
Richard III | |||
The Tempest | |||
1964 | Richard III | Lord Mayor's Wife | Aldwych Theatre (press nights) |
Henry VI | Simpcox's Wife | ||
1965 | Puntila | Dean's Wife | |
The Investigation | Witness 5 | ||
1965-1966 | |||
1971-1973 | Suddenly at Home | Maggie Howard | Fortune Theatre |
1973 | The House of Bernarda Alba | Magdalena | Greenwich Theatre |
Catsplay | Ilona | ||
1974-1976 | The Norman Conquests | Sarah | Globe Theatre, Gielgud Theatre, Apollo Theatre and other locations. |
1976-1978 | Donkey's Years | Lady Driver | Globe Theatre, Gielgud Theatre, Richmond Theatre and other locations |
1977-1978 | The Apple Cart | Phoenix Theatre, London and Chichester Festival Theatre | |
1978-1979 | The Millionairess | Epifania Ognisanti di Parerga Fitzfassenden | Theatre Royal Haymarket |
1981 | Moving | Sarah Gladwin | Sondheim Theatre |
1982 | Hobson's Choice | Maggie Hobson | Theatre Royal Haymarket |
Captain Brassbound’s Conversion | Lady Cicely Wayneflete | ||
1983-1984 | Hay Fever | Judith Bliss | Sondheim Theatre, Theatre Royal, Brighton, and other locations |
1985-1986 | The Dragon's Tail | Mary | Apollo Theatre |
1987 | Miranda | Miranda | Chichester Festival Theatre |
1988 | The Deep Blue Sea | Theatre Royal Haymarket | |
1991 | The Importance of Being Earnest | Lady Bracknell | Theatre Royal, Bath, Alhambra Theatre, Bradford, and other location |
1991-1992 | On Approval | Theatre Royal, Bath | |
1992-1993 | Relatively Speaking | Director | Theatre Royal, Bath, Theatre Royal, Windsor, and other locations |
1994 | How the Other Half Loves | Theatre Royal, Windsor and Richmond Theatre | |
1997 | Mrs Warren’s Profession | Mrs. Warren | Theatre Royal, Bath, Yvonne Arnaud Theatre |
1998 | Good Grief, Pericles Productions | June Pepper | Theatre Royal, Bath, Yvonne Arnaud Theatre and other locations |
2001-2002 | Star Quality | Lorraine Barrie | Apollo Theatre, Theatre Royal, Windsor, and other locations |
2001 | Theatre Royal, Bath | ||
2003-2004 | Time and the Conways | Mrs. Conway | Belgrade Theatre, Coventry, Theatre Royal, Bath, and other locations |
2004-2005 | Blithe Spirit | Madame Arcati | Savoy Theatre |
2006 | Entertaining Angels | Grace | Theatre Royal, Bath, Chichester Festival Theatre, and other locations |
2008 | The Importance of Being Earnest | Lady Bracknell | Vaudeville Theatre, (Strand) London |
2009 | Entertaining Angels | Grace | Chichester Festival Theatre, The Lowry, Salford, and other locations |
2010-2011 | The Rivals | Theatre Royal, Haymarket, London, Theatre Royal, Bath, and other locations | |
2012 | The Way of the World | Lady Wishfort | Chichester Festival Theatre |
2018 | The Chalk Garden | Mrs St Maugham | |
2020 | Theatrical Digs | Performer | Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guildford and Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guildford |
Awards and honoursEdit
On 2 April 2002, her 62nd birthday, Keith began a one-year term as High Sheriff of Surrey,<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref> the third woman to hold the post. She has also served in the past as a Deputy Lieutenant of Surrey.<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Keith was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 1989 New Year Honours.<ref>Template:London Gazette</ref> She was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2007 New Year Honours for "charitable services".<ref name="BBC News"/><ref>Template:London Gazette</ref> In the 2014 New Year Honours, she was made a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) for services to the Arts and to Charity.<ref>Staff (31 December 2013), "New Year's Honours: Lansbury and Keith become dames", BBC News; retrieved 17 March 2014.</ref>
Year | Award | Work | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1976 | Olivier Award for Best Actress in a New Play | Donkey's Years <ref name="years">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation | CitationClass=web
}}</ref> |
Template:Nom |
Olivier Award for Best Comedy Performance | Template:Won | |||
1977 | BAFTA TV Award for Best Actress | Private Lives | Template:Nom | |
BAFTA TV Award for Best Light Entertainment Performance | The Good Life | Template:Won | ||
1978 | BAFTA TV Award for Best Actress | The Norman Conquests / Saving it for Albie | Template:Won | |
BAFTA TV Award for Best Light Entertainment Performance | The Good Life / The Morecambe & Wise Show | Template:Nom | ||
1980 | To the Manor Born | Template:Nom |
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
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